Lipscomb J, Douglass C W
Am J Public Health. 1982 Jul;72(7):665-75. doi: 10.2105/ajph.72.7.665.
A theory of the dental care market is introduced which proposes that the vertically integrated (local/state/national) structure of the profession services as an organizational vehicle both for intra-professional debate and for developing provider-oriented dental care policy. We suggest that a special relationship exists between professionalism and professional regulation. Such regulation has functioned simultaneously to limit competition and to foster a prized consumption commodity for providers: professionalism and professional esteem. The organized pursuit of this commodity inherently dampens competition. Professionalism itself plays a crucial role in: 1) securing for organized dentistry a form of state regulation in which the providers themselves are the principal decision-makers; and 2) influencing provider and consumer market behavior in several significant respects, the net result being the formation of maintenance of a type of "leadership cartel" in the local market. Thus, a political-economic theory of the dental care market formally acknowledges professionalism as valued by established dentists and recent graduates as a central determining influence. Traditional models of pure competition and monopoly emerge as special, extreme cases of the general theory. Hypotheses are offered regarding consumer and provider behavior, market dynamics, and health policy and regulation.
本文介绍了一种牙科护理市场理论,该理论提出,该行业的垂直整合(地方/州/国家)结构作为一种组织工具,既用于专业内部辩论,也用于制定以提供者为导向的牙科护理政策。我们认为,专业主义与专业监管之间存在特殊关系。这种监管同时起到了限制竞争和为提供者培育一种珍贵消费商品的作用:专业主义和专业声誉。对这种商品的有组织追求本身就抑制了竞争。专业主义本身在以下方面发挥着关键作用:1)为有组织的牙科行业争取到一种国家监管形式,其中提供者自身是主要决策者;2)在几个重要方面影响提供者和消费者的市场行为,最终结果是在当地市场形成并维持一种“领导卡特尔”类型。因此,牙科护理市场的政治经济理论正式承认专业主义是既定牙医和近期毕业生所重视的核心决定性影响因素。传统的完全竞争和垄断模型成为该一般理论的特殊、极端情况。文中还提出了关于消费者和提供者行为、市场动态以及健康政策与监管的假设。